PHP provides support for the HTTP PUT method used by some clients to store files on a server. PUT requests are much simpler than a file upload using POST requests and they look something like this:
PUT /path/filename.html HTTP/1.1
This would normally mean that the remote client would like to save
the content that follows as: /path/filename.html in your web tree.
It is obviously not a good idea for Apache or PHP to automatically
let everybody overwrite any files in your web tree. So, to handle
such a request you have to first tell your web server that you
want a certain PHP script to handle the request. In Apache you do
this with the Script directive. It can be
placed almost anywhere in your Apache configuration file. A
common place is inside a <Directory>
block or perhaps inside
a <VirtualHost>
block. A line like this would do the trick:
Script PUT /put.php
This tells Apache to send all PUT requests for URIs that match the context in which you put this line to the put.php script. This assumes, of course, that you have PHP enabled for the .php extension and PHP is active. The destination resource for all PUT requests to this script has to be the script itself, not a filename the uploaded file should have.
With PHP you would then do something like the following in your put.php. This would copy the contents of the uploaded file to the file myputfile.ext on the server. You would probably want to perform some checks and/or authenticate the user before performing this file copy.
Example #1 Saving HTTP PUT files
<?php
/* PUT data comes in on the stdin stream */
$putdata = fopen("php://input", "r");
/* Open a file for writing */
$fp = fopen("myputfile.ext", "w");
/* Read the data 1 KB at a time
and write to the file */
while ($data = fread($putdata, 1024))
fwrite($fp, $data);
/* Close the streams */
fclose($fp);
fclose($putdata);
?>